robdonn wrote: » While I agree with you that the position of the Catholic Church probably has little influence over Yes voters, 87% of people do want abortion services to be expanded to cover at least some health grounds, a liberal abortion regime in respect to our current system.
robdonn wrote: » I think we could both agree that the 13% opposed to expanding abortion services is not entirely made up out of people who voted Yes in the Marriage Equality referendum, but even if by some strange fluke it is, that would still leave ~80% of Yes voters in support.
robdonn wrote: » So while you are right that probably not everyone who supports Marriage Equality are in support of liberal abortion, at least ~80% of them are (minimum), as well as a very significant number from the other side.
100cent wrote: » Such sincerity. You've sneered your way through the past few pages with your condescending bile.
100cent wrote: » You can do what you like with you sneering smileys.
eviltwin wrote: » That is tragic and I'm sincerely sorry for your family's loss. The care you describe is not hospice care. There is currently no dedicated hospice for infants. There should be.
100cent wrote: » Of course it is unintended.
100cent wrote: » My nephew was alive for 16 hours, he was sedated, felt no pain and his parents were given the privacy they required by the hospital. That is the central tent of the Hospice movement, dying with dignity and free from pain. You can do what you like with you sneering smileys.
robdonn wrote: » Finally! A list of the perinatal hospice services in Irish maternity hospitals. :P
robdonn wrote: » The intention to save the mother involves the action of ending the pregnancy and, in every case below 21 weeks, killing the foetus. There is nothing unintended about it, any allusion to it being an unintended consequence is just dishonesty.
lazygal wrote: » If you're removing a 12 week old foetus to save my life, how is that not intentionally killing a child? I can't take my born children's blood or organs to save my life, but doctors can kill my unborn children to save me.
100cent wrote: » ...........
lazygal wrote: » It isn't a hospice service. No matter how much you want to call it that. That's why groups opposing abortion want hospice services, because they don't exist in maternity hospitals. Women who have been diagnosed with FFA have said they were given no extra care during pregnancy, beyond perhaps extra scans to see if the heartbeat had stopped. There's additional services like bereavement support and cold cots but there is no defined perinatal hospice service in any maternity hospital in Ireland. You claimed you availed of something that doesn't exist. What did God say about bearing false witness?
100cent wrote: » Its all about the intention of the act. The intent of some terminations is to save the mother's life. The unintended consequence can sometimes be the death of the baby.
100cent wrote: » The hospice service is available within Maternity hospitals. There is no separate stand alone Hospice. But here I go feeding the troll.
100cent wrote: » Tragic, isn't it.
robdonn wrote: » An unintended consequence? Is a murder victim the unintended consequence of shooting them? That's some amazing mental gymnastics you've got going on there!
lazygal wrote: » So how far should the state go to prevent women having an abortion? Do you think all women would remain pregnant if they weren't able to travel for abortions?
Kiwi in IE wrote: » But foetuses are not safe, because women can go to the country next door and get an abortion.
100cent wrote: » The right to life is equal. Where there is a threat to the mother's life a termination is permissable, even if an unintended consequence is the sad death of the baby.
eviltwin wrote: » A Google search brings up no such hospice. Why are you lying? If it exists and is so wonderful why don't you promote it?
100cent wrote: » Anything that saves the life of one baby in the womb is to be welcomed. I have no authority to change laws in other countries. We must tend to our own shores and do our best to ensure that babies in the womb and their mothers are safe from the evils of abortion on Irish soil.
100cent wrote: » I'm not feeding your trolling, despite your continued attempts. I've told you what I've experienced at close quarters.
lazygal wrote: » Is a crime being committed if a woman imports abortion drugs from a legal source and takes them in Ireland?
lazygal wrote: » I'm not trolling. I agree that perinatal hospice care should be available, but not only because there are no other options but remaining pregnant. I think you know there's no such service available in Ireland, beyond the regular bereavement and mental health services, along with standard antenatal care, in Ireland, despite your unsubstantiated claims to have firsthand experience of perinatal hospice care in a maternity hospital in Ireland.